Emily Smith's ban for sharing team news on Instagram exposes a bigger problem

Why have more women than men faced punishments under Cricket Australia’s anti-corruption code in recent years? The answer lies in representation

Isabelle Westbury21-Nov-2019Made by men for men. This, at its heart, appears the issue behind the recent announcement that Emily Smith, a professional cricketer for the Hobart Hurricanes, has been banned from cricket for a year (nine months suspended). Cricket Australia’s anti-corruption code is clear and Smith’s lighthearted post on social media revealing the Hurricanes’ line-up for a match an hour before it was officially announced contravened it.It was in part a careless error by Smith but there’s more to it: when first drafting the code, the lawmakers could not have contemplated it being applied to a new class of professional athlete. Women now play as professional cricketers, but for a better part of their development years, their expectations, education and social interactions were built on the assumption that sport would remain a voluntary pastime for them.Over the last five years nearly all anti-corruption violations under CA’s remit have been perpetrated by women. None, it is understood, have been suspected of malicious intent. Considering more men than women are subject to CA’s anti-corruption code, this makes for an alarming trend.The authorities will tell you that professional women receive just as much education on corruption and doping, and on all the rules and regulations they must comply with, as the men. We also know that corruption in cricket remains a present and, in light of the rapid elevation of the women’s game globally, growing threat. Ample deterrents are sorely needed, and CA’s robust regulations conform to this.On paper, the sanction against Smith is a fair outcome. But there is a disconnect, because however much cricket’s authorities want to rid the game of corruption, banning ill-considered, but not ill-intended, women from the very game we are trying to encourage them towards was surely never the purpose.